For Immediate Release
Monday, January 26, 2026
NSIC Media Relations
NWCA Ranking
NSIC Wrestler of the Week
Zach Glazier (285 lbs., 6th, Albert Lea, Minn. / Albert Lea HS) - St. Cloud State
- Scored three team points in St Cloud State's 25-13 win over No. 12 UMary
- Made his debut for the Huskies where he beat No. 3 Luke Tweeton 8-1
- Scored two takedowns to pair with an escape and riding time as he starts the season 1-0
Other Top Performances
Jaret Peterson (Augustana)
- Tallied a 22-2 tech fall (7:00) over Andreas Barnett in a win over USF
- Recorded a takedown and two stall points to take a 5-0 lead into the third period
- Dominated in the third period, recording three takedowns, an escape, and two stall points
- Added four nearfall points and a riding point to close the tech fall
Sean Solis (UMary)
- Defeated St. Cloud's Jayce Luna by a 14-3 major decision
- Took down Minnesota State's Colton Hush via a 11-3 major decision
- Solis is now 9-0 in dual competition this season
Drake Hayward (Minnesota State)
- Went 2-0 as he helped the Mavericks win a pair of road duals against Jamestown and #14 UMary
- Recorded a 15-0 tech fall win over UJ's Colton Schaad at 3:36 in their match
- Tallied a 12-2 major decision win over UMary's Joey Mushinsky
- Allowed just two points (two escapes) during his two matches
Liam Babitt (MSU Moorhead)
- Defeated SMSU's Evan Thompson via fall at 3:33 in MSUM's dual win over the Mustangs
- Added a pin over Concordia College's Mason Swanson at 4:43
Payton Wayman (Minot State)
- Won 3-of-4 matches on the week, wrestling twice in duals at 184 pounds for the Beavers
-In a dual against Bismarck State, he won by pin in 5 minutes in the dual
-In an NSIC dual against Southwest Minnesota State, he lost a close 13-8 decision
Brady Westall (Northern State)
- Defeated No. 13 Brady Schuh (Dec 8-7) of No. 6 Wisconsin Parkside in the 184 weight class
- Improved to a 21-8 record on the year
Tate Condezo (Southwest Minnesota State)
- Picked up his 20th and 21st wins of the season this weekend against MSUM and Minot State
- Defeated Jacob Thomas of MSUM by decision, 13-10
- Pinned Minot State's Roman Leifridt in the third period
- One of three pins for SMSU in the team's first dual win against MSU since 2020
- Pin against Leifridt was Condezo's eighth by fall this season
Jalen Spuhler (Parkside)
- Defeated #14 Rudy Lopez of Northern State by decision 8-4
- Helped No. 6 Parkside win the dual, 22-12
NSIC Wrestling Pages
NSIC Wrestlers of the Week
11/4/25: Caleb Meunier – Minnesota State
11/11/25: Krayle Stormer – Northern State
11/17/25: Jordan Blanchard – Parkside
11/24/25: Dominic Ducato – St. Cloud State
12/8/25: Coy Gunderson – Augustana
12/15/25: Jalen Spuhler – Parkside
12/22/25: Max Ramberg – Augustana
1/5/26: Payton Handevidt – Augustana
1/12/26: Luke Tweeton – University of Mary
1/19/26: Gabriel Smith - St. Cloud State
1/26/26: Zach Glazier - St. Cloud State
About the NSIC
The NSIC is a 16-team, 18-sport, NCAA Division II conference with institutions located in Minnesota, Nebraska, North Dakota, and South Dakota. The NSIC is a model Division II conference that uses high-level athletics competition to develop champions in the classroom and community while empowering student-athletes to be impactful and positive leaders. Formed in 1992 by the merger of the Northern Intercollegiate Conference (men’s league) and the Northern Sun Conference (women’s league), the NSIC has flourished over the past three decades, maturing into a union of Upper Midwest colleges and universities. The NSIC has won 27 team national championships and crowned 122 individual national champions. For additional information, visit
NorthernSun.org.
About NCAA Division II
The NCAA, the national governing body for college athletics, is a volunteer association of more than 1,000 colleges and universities that classify their athletics programs in one of three membership divisions. The 300+ institutions in NCAA Division II support a balanced approach in which student-athletes can earn scholarships based on their athletic ability, pursue their desired academic degree, and participate in all the campus and surrounding community have to offer. Division II student-athletes annually graduate at rates higher than their student body peers, and they have access to the best championships-participant ratio among the NCAA’s three divisions. Division II gives student-athletes the unique opportunity to compete in the classroom, on the field, in their career, for their causes, and on their terms. For additional information, visit NCAA.org.
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